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サムエル記上 4

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1 イスラエルびとは出てペリシテびとと戦おうとして、エベネゼルのほとりに陣をしき、ペリシテびとはアペクに陣をしいた。

2 ペリシテびとはイスラエルびとにむかって陣備えをしたが、戦うに及んで、イスラエルびとはペリシテびとのに敗れ、ペリシテびとは戦場において、おおよそ人を殺した。

3 民が陣営に退いた時、イスラエルの長老たちは言った、「なにゆえ、はきょう、ペリシテびとのにわれわれを敗られたのか。シロへ行って主の契約の箱をここへ携えてくることにしよう。そしてをわれわれのうちに迎えて、の手から救っていただこう」。

4 そこで民は人をシロにつかわし、ケルビムの上に座しておられる万主の契約の箱を、そこから携えてこさせた。その時エリのふたりの子、ホフニとピネハスは神の契約の箱と共に、その所にいた。

5 主の契約の箱が陣営についた時、イスラエルびとはみな大声で叫んだので、地は鳴り響いた。

6 ペリシテびとは、その叫び声を聞いて言った、「ヘブルびとの陣営の、この大きな叫び声は何事か」。そして主の箱が、陣営に着いたことを知った時、

7 ペリシテびとは恐れて言った、「神々が陣営にきたのだ」。彼らはまた言った、「ああ、われわれはわざわいである。このようなことは今までなかった。

8 ああ、われわれはわざわいである。だれがわれわれをこれらの強い神々から救い出すことができようか。これらの神々は、もろもろの災をもってエジプトびとを荒野で撃ったのだ。

9 ペリシテびとよ、勇気を出して男らしくせよ。ヘブルびとがあなたがたに仕えたように、あなたがたが彼らに仕えることのないために、男らしく戦え」。

10 こうしてペリシテびとが戦ったので、イスラエルびとは敗れて、おのおのその家に逃げて帰った。戦死者はひじょうに多く、イスラエルの歩兵で倒れたものは三万であった。

11 また神の箱は奪われ、エリのふたりの子、ホフニとピネハスは殺された。

12 そのひとりのベニヤミンびとが、衣服を裂き、に土をかぶって、戦場から走ってシロにきた。

13 彼が着いたとき、エリは道のかたわらにある自分の座にすわって待ちかまえていた。その神の箱の事を気づかっていたからである。その人がにはいって、情報をつたえたので、はこぞって叫んだ。

14 エリはその叫び声を聞いて言った、「この騒ぎ声は何か」。その人は急いでエリの所へきてエリに告げた。

15 その時エリは九十八歳で、そのは固まって見ることができなかった。

16 その人はエリに言った、「わたしは戦場からきたものです。きょう戦場からのがれたのです」。エリは言った、「わがよ、様はどうであったか」。

17 しらせをもたらしたその人は答えて言った、「イスラエルびとは、ペリシテびとのから逃げ、民のうちにはまた多くの戦死者があり、あなたのふたりの子、ホフニとピネハスも死に、神の箱は奪われました」。

18 彼が神の箱のことを言ったとき、エリはその座から、あおむけにのかたわらに落ち、首を折って死んだ。老いて身が重かったからである。彼のイスラエルをさばいたのは四十年であった。

19 彼の嫁、ピネハスのはみごもって出産の時が近づいていたが、神の箱が奪われたこと、しゅうととが死んだというしらせを聞いたとき、陣痛が起り身をかがめて子を産んだ。

20 彼女が死にかかっている時、世話をしていた女が彼女に言った、「恐れることはありません。男のが生れました」。しかし彼女は答えもせず、また顧みもしなかった。

21 ただ彼女は「栄光はイスラエルを去った」と言って、その子をイカボデと名づけた。これは神の箱の奪われたこと、また彼女のしゅうととのことによるのである。

22 彼女はまた、「栄光はイスラエルを去った。神の箱が奪われたからです」と言った。

   

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Exploring the Meaning of 1 Samuel 4

Napsal(a) Garry Walsh

Although everyone in Israel knew that Samuel had been chosen as the Lord’s prophet, the Israelites still didn’t listen to his prophecy. As a result, there was a new battle between the army of Israel and the army of the Philistines. The Philistines won and about four thousand men of Israel died.

The Israelites were in great distress. They sent for the Ark of the Covenant, thinking that if they brought it from Shiloh to the battlefield, it would help bring the power of Jehovah into the battle, and help them win. The two sons of Eli the High Priest, Hophni and Phinehas, came along with the Ark. When the Ark reached the Israelite camp, the Israelites shouted with joy, and the Philistines became afraid. The Philistines knew that the Israelite God was surely with them, and they remembered His power from the plagues of Egypt. (See Exodus 7 and the following chapters.)

And yet, the Philistines were tough enemies. They didn’t want to be slaves to Israel, as Israel had been to them. They gathered their courage and defeated Israel in battle again, and even captured the Ark of the Covenant.

A messenger was sent to bring the bad news to Shiloh, where Eli was. Hophni and Phinehas were dead, and the Ark was in enemy hands. When he heard the news, the elderly Eli fell backwards from his seat and died. Phinehas' wife was pregnant, and when she heard the news of her husband’s death it crushed her spirit, and she died shortly after delivering a son that she named Ichabod. So just as the Lord had told Samuel, the priestly role was taken from Eli’s family.

Why was the Ark of the Covenant important? It contained two stone tablets, on which were written the Ten Commandments. These were written by the finger of God, and given to Moses on Mount Sinai. The Commandments represented the covenant between the Lord and people. They would be joined together through love and faith: God’s love for His people, and their love for Him. Love, faith in God and obedience to His message would forever bind them. The covenant is only fulfilled when people, individually and collectively, do what is written on those two tablets. (See True Christianity 285.)

In this story, the Israelites lost the Ark of the Covenant with the Ten Commandments. This symbolizes how we can lose our covenant with the Lord, our Creator. We are free to keep our covenant with the Lord and follow His laws, or to break it. This story shows us how breaking the covenant can be really destructive.

God, however, will never give up on us, and is always ready to come into our lives if we accept Him. In True Christianity 285, Swedenborg writes that God is always ready to keep His commandment with us, but we must use our free will to keep our commandment with Him. This is illustrated in a quote from Revelation 3:20: “Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and dine with him, and he with me.”

While this story is an example of a covenant with God described in the Old Testament of the Word, this relationship between God and His people (and, of course, with each one of us individually) is a theme throughout all of the Bible. The New Testament describes a new covenant that the Lord seeks to build with each of us.

In Swedenborg’s Writings we learn that the Philistines, whom the Israelites were battling, represent faith without charity. Both faith and charity are necessary to follow the Lord, and knowledge of what is right and true is not useful unless we apply it to our lives. If we don't apply it, this knowledge becomes sort of abstract, something that we remember but that isn't an ongoing part of our life. (See Arcana Coelestia 1197.)

Since Philistines represent knowledge without charity, perhaps this story is telling us that in order to keep our covenant with God, it is not enough to know what is required of us, what is written on the tables of stone. We must also act accordingly. When we both understand the commandments and practice them, then we are able to keep our covenant with God.

Ze Swedenborgových děl

 

Arcana Coelestia # 1197

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1197. 'From whom Pelishtim came forth' means the nation which came from these, and which means a knowledge of the cognitions of faith and charity. This is clear from the Word where they are mentioned many times. In the Ancient Church all were called Philistines who spoke much about faith and who asserted that salvation lay in faith, and yet possessed nothing of the life of faith. Consequently they more than any others were called uncircumcised, that is, devoid of charity. (For references to them as the uncircumcised, see 1 Samuel 14:6; 17:26, 36; 31:4; 2 Samuel 1:20; and elsewhere.) Being such as they were they inevitably made cognitions of faith matters of memory, for cognitions of spiritual and celestial things, and the arcana of faith themselves, become purely matters of memory when a person who is acquainted with them is devoid of charity. Things of the memory are so to speak dead if the person is not such that he lives according to them from conscience. When he does live according to them from conscience things of the memory are in that case matters of life as well, and only then do they remain with him for his use and salvation following life in the body. Knowledge and cognitions are of no value to anyone in the next life, even though he may have known all the arcana that have ever been revealed, if they have made no impact on his life.

[2] Throughout the prophetical parts of the Word 'the Philistines' means people such as these, as they do in the historical sections of the Word, as when Abraham sojourned in the land of the Philistines and made a covenant with Abimelech, the king of the Philistines, Genesis 20:1-end; 21:22-end; 26:1-33. Because the Philistines here meant cognitions of faith, and because Abraham represented the celestial things of faith, he sojourned there and made a covenant with them. So likewise did Isaac, who represented the spiritual things of faith. But Jacob did not do so because he represented the external features of the Church.

[3] That 'the Philistines' means, in general, knowledge of the cognitions of faith, and in particular people who make faith and salvation reside in cognitions alone which they make matters of memory, becomes clear also in Isaiah,

Rejoice not, O Philistia, all of you, that the rod which smites you has been broken, for from the serpent's root will come forth an adder, and its fruit will be a flying prester. Isaiah 14:29

Here 'the serpent's root' stands for facts, 'an adder' for evil arising out of falsities based on facts. 'The fruits of a flying prester' is their works which, because they are the product of evil desires, are called 'a flying prester'

[4] In Joel,

What are you to Me, O Tyre and Sidon, and all the borders of Philistia? Are you rendering Me a recompense? Swiftly and speedily I will return your recompense upon your own head, inasmuch as you have taken My silver and My gold, and My good and desirable treasures you have carried into your temples, and have sold the sons of Judah and the sons of Jerusalem to the sons of the Javanites, 1 that you might remove them far away from their border. Joel 3:4-6.

What 'the Philistines' and the whole of Philistia, or 'all its borders', are used to mean here is plain. 'Silver' and 'gold' here are the spiritual and celestial things of faith, 'good and desirable treasures' cognitions of them. 'They carried them into their temples' means that they were in possession of them and proclaimed them. 'They sold the sons of Judah and the sons of Jerusalem' however means that they possessed no love and no faith. In the Word 'Judah' is the celestial element of faith, and 'Jerusalem' the spiritual element deriving from it, which were 'removed far away from their borders'. Further examples exist in the Prophets, such as Jeremiah 25:20; Jeremiah 47:1-end; Ezekiel 16:27, 57; 25:15-16; Amos 1:8; 19; Zephaniah 2:5; Psalms 87:4; and the people of Caphtor are mentioned in Deuteronomy 2:23; Jeremiah 47:4; Amos 9:7.

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1. i.e. the Greeks

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Society for the permission to use this translation.